Method of fabricating structured particles composed of silicon or a silicon-based material and their use in lithium rechargeable batteries

ABSTRACT

Pillared particles of silicon or silicon-comprising material and a method of fabricating the same are disclosed. These particles may be used to create both a composite anode structure with a polymer binder, a conductive additive and a metal foil current collector, and an electrode structure. The structure of the particles overcomes the problems of charge/discharge capacity loss.

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/669,216, filed Feb. 26, 2010, which is a U.S. National State application of International Patent Application no. PCT/GB2008/002452, which claims priority to U.K. Patent Application no. GB0713898.5, filed Jul. 17, 2007, each of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.

The invention relates to a particle comprising silicon, a method of fabricating a particle, an electrode containing particles as its active material, an electrochemical cell, a lithium rechargeable cell anode, a cell, a device powered by a cell, a method of creating a composite electrode, a method of fabricating a lithium rechargeable cell and a method of fabricating silicon-comprising fibres.

The recent increase in the use of portable electronic devices such as mobile telephones and notebook computers and the emerging trend of using rechargeable batteries in hybrid electric vehicles has created a need for smaller, lighter, longer lasting rechargeable batteries to provide the power to the above mentioned and other battery powered devices. During the 1990s, lithium rechargeable batteries, specifically lithium-ion batteries, became popular and, in terms of units sold, now dominate the portable electronics marketplace and are set to be applied to new, cost sensitive applications. However, as more and more power hungry functions are added to the above mentioned devices (e.g. cameras on mobile phones), improved and lower cost batteries that store more energy per unit mass and per unit volume are required.

It is well known that silicon can be used as the active anode material of a rechargeable lithium-ion electrochemical battery cell (see, for example, Insertion Electrode Materials for Rechargeable Lithium Batteries, M. Winter, J. O. Besenhard, M. E. Spahr, and P. Novak in Adv. Mater. 1998, 10, No. 10). The basic composition of a conventional lithium-ion rechargeable battery cell is shown in FIG. 1 including a graphite-based anode electrode, the component to be replaced by the silicon-based anode. The battery cell includes a single cell but may also include more than one cell.

The battery cell generally comprises a copper current collector 10 for the anode and an aluminium current collector 12 for the cathode which are externally connectable to a load or to a recharging source as appropriate. A graphite-based composite anode layer 14 overlays the current collector 10 and a lithium containing metal oxide-based composite cathode layer 16 overlays the current collector 12. A porous plastic spacer or separator 20 is provided between the graphite-based composite anode layer 14 and the lithium containing metal oxide-based composite cathode layer 16 and a liquid electrolyte material is dispersed within the porous plastic spacer or separator 20, the composite anode layer 14 and the composite cathode layer 16. In some cases, the porous plastic spacer or separator 20 may be replaced by a polymer electrolyte material and in such cases the polymer electrolyte material is present within both the composite anode layer 14 and the composite cathode layer 16.

When the battery cell is fully charged, lithium has been transported from the lithium containing metal oxide via the electrolyte into the graphite-based layer where it reacts with the graphite to create the compound, LiC₆. The graphite, being the electrochemically active material in the composite anode layer, has a maximum capacity of 372 mAh/g. It will be noted that the terms “anode” and “cathode” are used in the sense that the battery is placed across a load.

It is generally believed that silicon, when used as an active anode material in a lithium-ion rechargeable cell, provides a significantly higher capacity than the currently used graphite. Silicon, when converted to the compound Li₂₁Si₅ by reaction with lithium in an electrochemical cell, has a maximum capacity of 4,200 mAh/g, considerably higher than the maximum capacity for graphite. Thus, if graphite can be replaced by silicon in a lithium rechargeable battery the desired increase in stored energy per unit mass and per unit volume can be achieved.

Existing approaches of using a silicon or silicon-based active anode material in a lithium-ion electrochemical cell have failed to show sustained capacity over the required number of charge/discharge cycles and are thus not commercially viable.

One approach disclosed in the art uses silicon in the form of a powder (say as particles or spherical elements with a 10 μm diameter), in some instances made into a composite with or without an electronic additive and containing an appropriate binder such as polyvinylidene difluoride coated onto a copper current collector. However, this electrode system fails to show sustained capacity when subjected to repeated charge/discharge cycles. It is believed that this capacity loss is due to partial mechanical isolation of the silicon powder mass arising from the volumetric expansion/contraction associated with lithium insertion/extraction to and from the host silicon. In turn this gives rise to electrical isolation of the silicon elements from both the copper current collector and themselves. In addition, the volumetric expansion/contraction causes the spherical elements to be broken up causing a loss of electrical contact within the spherical element itself.

Another approach known in the art designed to deal with the problem of the large volume changes during successive cycles is to make the size of the silicon elements that make up the silicon powder very small, that is to use spherical particles that have diameters in the 1-10 nm range. This strategy assumes that the nano-sized elements can undergo the large volumetric expansion/contraction associated with lithium insertion/extraction without being broken up or destroyed. However, this approach is problematic in that it requires the handling of very fine, nano-sized powder that may pose a health and safety risk and it does not prevent the electrical isolation of the spherical elements from both the copper current collector and themselves as the silicon powder undergoes the volumetric expansion/contraction associated with lithium insertion/extraction. Importantly, the large surface area of the nano-sized elements can give rise to the creation of a lithium-containing surface film that introduces a large irreversible capacity into the lithium-ion battery cell. In addition, the large number of small silicon particles creates a large number of particle-to-particle contacts for a given mass of silicon and these each have a contact resistance and may thus cause the electrical resistance of the silicon mass to be too high. The above problems have thus prevented silicon particles from becoming a commercially viable replacement for graphite in lithium rechargeable batteries and specifically lithium-ion batteries.

In another approach described by Ohara et al. in Journal of Power Sources 136 (2004) 303-306 silicon is evaporated onto a nickel foil current collector as a thin film and this structure is then used to form the anode of a lithium-ion cell. However, although this approach gives good capacity retention, this is only the case for very thin films (say ˜50 nm) and thus these electrode structures do not give usable amounts of capacity per unit area. Increasing the film thickness (say >250 nm) causes the good capacity retention to be eliminated. The good capacity retention of these thin films is considered by the present inventors to be due to the ability of the thin film to absorb the volumetric expansion/contraction associated with lithium insertion/extraction from the host silicon without the film being broken up or destroyed. Also, the thin film has a much lower surface area than the equivalent mass of nano-sized particles and thus the amount of irreversible capacity due to the formation of a lithium-containing surface film is reduced. The above problems have thus prevented a thin film of silicon on a metal foil current collector from becoming a commercially viable replacement for graphite in lithium rechargeable batteries and specifically lithium-ion batteries.

In another approach described in US2004/0126659, silicon is evaporated onto nickel fibres which are then used to form the anode of a lithium battery.

However this is found to provide an uneven distribution of silicon on the nickel fibres hence significantly affecting operation. In addition, these structures have a high ratio of nickel current collector mass to active silicon mass and thus do not give usable amounts of capacity per unit area or per unit mass.

A review of nano- and bulk-silicon-based insertion anodes for lithium-ion secondary cells has been provided by Kasavajjula et al (J. Power Sources (2006), doi:10.1016/jpowsour.2006.09.84), herewith incorporated by reference herein.

Another approach described in UK Patent Application GB2395059A uses an silicon electrode comprising a regular or irregular array of silicon pillars fabricated on a silicon substrate. These structured silicon electrodes show good capacity retention when subjected to repeated charge/discharge cycles and this good capacity retention is considered by the present inventors to be due to the ability of the silicon pillars to absorb the volumetric expansion/contraction associated with lithium insertion/extraction from the host silicon without the pillars being broken up or destroyed. However, the structured silicon electrodes described in the above publication is fabricated by using a high purity, single crystal silicon wafer and hence produces an electrode with a potentially high cost.

The first aspect of the invention provides a particle comprising silicon having a particle core and an array of silicon-comprising pillars extending therefrom.

The pillars may be regular or irregular. The pillars of the present invention are 0.08 to 0.70 microns in one dimension, preferably 0.1 to 0.5 microns, more preferably 0.2 to 0.4 microns, and most preferably 0.3 microns or above. In a second dimension, the pillars are 4 to 100 microns, preferably 10 to 80 microns, more preferably 30 microns or above. The pillars thus have an aspect ratio of greater than 20:1. The pillars may have a substantially circular cross-section or a substantially non-circular cross-section.

The pillared particle may comprise undoped silicon, doped silicon or a mixture, such as a silicon-germanium mixture. In particular, the particle may have a silicon-purity of 90.00% to 99.95% by mass, preferably 90.0% to 99.5%. The silicon can be doped with any material for example, phosphorous, aluminium, silver, boron and/or zinc. The particle may be relatively low purity metallurgical grade silicon.

The particles may be regular or irregular in cross section and can be from 10 μm to 1 mm in diameter, preferably 20 μm to 150 μm, more preferably 25 μm to 75 μm.

The second aspect of the invention provides a method of fabricating a particle of the first aspect, comprising the steps of etching a particle comprising silicon. In particular, the pillars can be created by chemical reaction etching or galvanic exchange etching.

The third aspect of the invention provides a composite electrode containing particles as defined in the first aspect of the invention as one of its active materials. In particular, the third aspect provides a composite electrode which uses copper as a current collector. In a feature of the third aspect, the electrode can be an anode.

The third aspect therefore further provides an electrochemical cell containing an electrode as defined above. In particular, there is provided an electrochemical cell in which the cathode comprises a lithium-containing compound capable of releasing and reabsorbing lithium ions as its active material. In particular, there is provided an electrochemical cell in which the cathode comprises lithium-based metal oxide or phosphate as its active material preferably LiCoO₂ or LiMn_(x)Ni_(x)Co_(1-2x)O₂ or LiFePO₄.

The invention further provides a lithium rechargeable cell anode comprising particles of the first aspect. In particular, there is provided an anode in which the particles are part of a composite.

The third aspect further provides a cell comprising an anode and a cathode wherein the cathode preferably comprises lithium-based material, more preferably lithium cobalt dioxide.

There is further provided a device powered by a cell as defined above.

The fourth aspect of the invention provides a method of creating a composite electrode comprising the steps of preparing a solvent-based slurry containing pillared particles, coating the slurry onto a current collector and evaporating the solvent to create a composite film.

The invention further provides a method of fabricating a lithium rechargeable cell comprising the steps of creating an anode as defined above and adding a cathode an electrolyte. In particular, the method further comprising adding a separator between cathode and the anode. A casing may be provided around the cell.

There is also provided a method of fabricating silicon-comprising fibres in which the pillars are detached from a particle of the first aspect by one or more of scraping, agitating or chemical etching.

The production of an anode electrode structure using the structured particles of the invention further overcomes the problems of reversibly reacting silicon with lithium. In particular by arranging the particles in a composite structure, that is a mixture of particles, a polymer binder and an conductive additive, or by directing bonding the structured particles to the current collector, the charge/discharge process becomes reversible and repeatable and good capacity retention is achieved. This good reversibility is considered by the present inventors to be due to the ability of the silicon pillars forming part of the structured silicon particle to absorb the volumetric expansion/contraction associated with lithium insertion/extraction from the host silicon without the pillars being broken up or destroyed. Importantly, the silicon electrodes described in this invention are fabricated by using a low purity, metallurgical grade silicon and hence produces an electrode with a potentially low cost.

Embodiments of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the figures, of which:

FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram showing the components of a battery cell;

FIG. 2 is a electron micrograph of a pillared particle according to embodiments of the present invention;

FIG. 3 shows the overall galvanic exchange etching mechanism; and

FIG. 4 shows hypothetical kinetic curves in the form of the partial currents in the galvanic exchange etching process.

In overview the invention allows creation of pillared particles of silicon or silicon-comprising material and the use of these particles to create both a composite anode structure with a polymer binder, an conductive additive (if required) and a metal foil current collector and an electrode structure. In particular it is believed that the structure of the particles that make up the composite overcomes the problem of charge/discharge capacity loss. By providing a particle with a plurality of elongate or long thin pillars the problem of charge/discharge capacity loss is reduced.

Typically the pillars will have a length to diameter ratio of approximately 20:1. The insertion and removal of lithium into the pillars, although causing volume expansion and volume contraction, does not cause the pillars to be destroyed and hence the intra-fibre electronic conductivity is preserved.

The pillars can be made on the particles by wet etching/using a chemical galvanic exchange method for example as described in our co-pending application GB 0601318.9 with common assignees and entitled “Method of etching a silicon-based material”, incorporated herewith by reference. A related method which may also be used has been disclosed in Peng K-Q, Yan, Y-J Gao, S-P, Zhu J., Adv. Materials, 14 (2004), 1164-1167 (“Peng”); K. Peng et al, Angew. Chem. Int. Ed., 44 2737-2742; and K. Peng et al., Adv. Funct. Mater., 16 (2006), 387-394; K. Peng, Z. Huang and J. Zhu, Adv. Mater., 16 (2004), 127-132; and T. Qui, L. Wu, X. Yang, G. S. Huang and Z. Y. Zhang, Appl. Phys. Lett., 84 (2004), 3867-3869. The above-mentioned methods are used to produce pillars from a high purity silicon wafer.

In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, pillars are produced on crystalline particles of relatively low purity silicon such as metallurgical grade silicon. The method comprises the five steps of: grinding and sieving; washing; nucleation; etching; and silver removal, as explained, by way of example only, later. An electron micrograph of pillared particle made in accordance with present invention is shown in FIG. 2.

Any appropriate grinding process is suitable such as power grinding or ball milling. The skilled person will appreciate that a minimum particle size will exist below which pillars cannot be etched onto the surface and instead the particle will be homogeneously etched away. Particles having a diameter less than 0.5 μm may be too small.

A more uniform pillar array, in terms of density and height, is produced by nucleating before etching. This step produces a uniform distribution of silver nuclei/islands (nuclei combine and form silver islands that are the site for pillar growth).

Silver islands delineate the formation of pillars and galvanic fluoride etching of the {100} planes:see FIG. 3. Referring to FIG. 3 there is shown a silicon surface 301 having a pillar 307. An electron 305 is transferred from a fluoride ion 303 to the silicon surface 301. The reaction of fluorine with silicon 301 and fluoride ions 303 gives rise to fluorosilicate ions 305. This is the anodic etching process. The cathode process is the discharge of silver ions 309 to produce metallic silver 311.

The structure is explained by supposing that silicon-fluoride bonds are formed as an essential step in the etch process. And furthermore that structures that are Si—F(mono-fluoride) are stable and those that are F—Si—F(di-fluoride) and Si[—F]3 (tri-fluoride) are not stable. This is because of steric interference on the Si surface of nearest neighbour groups. The case of the {111} plane is that, a mono-fluoride surface, stable except at the edges, inevitably proceeds to a tri-fluoride surface and consequent instability. The {110} surface is the only stable major crystal plane of Si that will have exclusively mono-fluoride bonds-hence its stability and the etch rate ratio [etch rate <100>]:[etch rate <110>] of about three orders of magnitude. So the sides of the pillars will be terminated on {110} planes.

A pillar surface density may be used to define the density of the pillars on the surface of the particle. Herein, this is defined as F=P/[R+P] wherein: F is the pillar surface density; P is the total surface area of the particle occupied by pillars; and R is the total surface area of the particle unoccupied by pillars.

The larger the pillar surface density, the larger the lithium capacity per unit area of a silicon particle electrode and the larger the amount of harvestable pillars available to create fibres.

For example, using the above-mentioned silicon powder from Elken of Norway having a pre-etching size of 400×300×200 μm, pillars are produced all over the surface having a pillar height of approximately 25 to 30 μm, a diameter of approximately 200 to 500 nm and a pillar surface density, F, of 10-50%, more typically, 30%.

For example, particles having a pre-etching size of approximately 63-80×50×35 μm are found to produce pillars with a height of approximately 10 to 15 μm, with a coverage of approximately 30% and a diameter of approximately 200 to 500 nm

In a preferred embodiment, pillars of for example 100 microns in length and 0.2 microns in diameter are fabricated on and from a silicon-comprising particle. More generally pillars of length in the range of 4 to 100 microns and diameter or transverse dimension in the range of 0.08 to 0.70 microns are fabricated from a particle having an initial size of 10 to 1000 μm.

According to the process, the silicon particles may be predominantly n- or p-type and, according to the chemical approach, and may be etched on any exposed (100), (111) or (110) crystal face. Since the etching proceeds along crystal planes, the resulting pillars are single crystals. Because of this structural feature, the pillars will be substantially straight facilitating length to diameter ratio of greater than 20:1.

The pillared-particles may then be used to form a composite electrode as described later. Alternatively, the pillars may be detached from the particle and used to form a fibre-based electrode. The detached pillars may also be described as fibres.

The invention encompasses the detachment of the pillars from the particle. The particle, with pillars attached, can be placed in a beaker or any appropriate container, covered in an inert liquid such as ethanol or water and subjected to ultra-sonic agitation. It is found that within several minutes the liquid is seen to be turbid and it can be seen by electron microscope examination that at this stage the pillars have been removed from the particle.

In an embodiment, the pillars are removed from the particle in a two stage process. In the first stage, the particles are washed several times in water and, if necessary, dried in a low vacuum system to remove the water. In the second stage, the particles are agitated in an ultrasonic bath to detach the pillars. These are suspended in water and then filtered using different various filter paper sizes to collect the silicon fibres.

It will be appreciated that alternative methods for “harvesting” the pillars include scraping the particle surface to detach them or detaching them chemically. One chemical approach appropriate to n-type silicon material comprises etching the particle in an HF solution in the presence of backside illumination.

Once the pillared particles have been fabricated they can be used as the active material in a composite anode for lithium-ion electrochemical cells. To fabricate a composite anode, the pillared particles are mixed with polyvinylidene difluoride and made into a slurry with a casting solvent such as n-methyl pyrrolidinone. This slurry can then be applied or coated onto a metal plate or metal foil or other conducting substrate for example physically with a blade or in any other appropriate manner to yield a coated film of the required thickness and the casting solvent is then evaporated from this film using an appropriate drying system which may employ elevated temperatures in the range of 50 degrees C. to 140 degrees C. to leave the composite film free or substantially from casting solvent. The resulting composite film has a porous structure in which the mass of silicon-based pillared particles is typically between 70 percent and 95 percent. The composite film will have a percentage pore volume of 10-30 percent, preferably about 20 percent.

Fabrication of the lithium-ion battery cell thereafter can be carried out in any appropriate manner for example following the general structure shown in FIG. 1 but with a silicon-comprising active anode material rather than a graphite active anode material. For example the silicon particle-based composite anode layer is covered by the porous spacer 20, the electrolyte added to the final structure saturating all the available pore volume. The electrolyte addition is done after placing the electrodes in an appropriate casing and may include vacuum filling of the anode to ensure the pore volume is filled with the liquid electrolyte.

Some embodiments provide an electrode containing as its active material a plurality of pillared particles of silicon. Capacity retention is improved as the pillared structure of the silicon allows for accommodation of the volume expansion associated with insertion/extraction (charging and discharging) of lithium. Advantageously, the pillared particles may be created by etching lumps of low purity, silicon (termed metallurgical grade silicon) such that a core of silicon remains covered by pillars that are between 0.08 μm and 0.5 μm in diameter and between 4 μm and 150 μm in length.

A particular advantage of the approach described herein is that large sheets of silicon-based anode can be fabricated and then rolled or stamped out subsequently as is currently the case in graphite-based anodes for lithium-ion battery cells meaning that the approach described herein can be retrofitted with the existing manufacturing capability.

The invention will now be illustrated by reference to one or more of the following non-limiting examples:

Grinding and Seiving

In the first stage, widely-available metallurgical grade silicon, such as “Silgrain” from Elkem of Norway, was ground and sieved to produce particles in the range 10 to 1000 μm, preferably 30 to 300 μm and more preferably 50 to 100 μm.

Washing

The second stage comprised washing the ground and sieved particles in water to remove any fine particles stuck to the big particles. The washed particles were then treated in diluted HNO₃ (1 mol·L) or H₂SO₄/H₂O₂ (1:2 in volume) or H₂O₂/NH₃H₂O/H₂O₂ (1:1:1 in volume) in 10 minutes to get rid of the possible organic or metal impurities.

Nucleation

In the third stage, a nucleation reaction was carried out in a solution of 17.5 ml HF (40%)+20 ml AgNO₃ (0.06 mol/l)+2.5 ml EtOH (97.5%)+10 ml H₂O for 7˜10 minutes at room temperature (˜23° C.) using 0.1 g of silicon particles with the dimension of about 400×300×200 μm. For the same weight of silicon, smaller silicon particles required a larger solution volume due to the increased surface area to volume ratio.

The effect of ethanol at room temperature was to slow the chemical processes which gives a more uniform distribution of silver islands. The time (especially at the upper limit) was sufficient to consume a significant amount of the solution silver.

Etching

The fourth stage comprised etching. The etching reaction used a solution of 17.5 ml HF (40%)+12.5 ml Fe(NO₃)₃ (0.06 mol·l)+2 ml AgNO₃ (0.06 mol·l)+18 ml H₂O for 1˜1.5 hours at room temperature (˜23° C.) using 0.1 g of silicon particles with the dimension of about 400×300×200 μm. For the same weight of silicon, smaller silicon particles required a larger solution volume due to the increased surface area to volume ratio. In addition, as the particle size decreases, a shorter time is needed for smaller silicon particles, for example, 30 min for 100˜120 μm (sieve size) sample and 20 min for 63˜80 μm sample.

In further modifications, stirring increased the etch rate possibly owing to the discharge of hydrogen. Here, the out diffusion of fluorosilicate ion was rate limiting.

The skilled person will understand that oxidizing agents other than Ag⁺ may be equally suitable. For example: K₂PtCl₆; Cu(NO₃)₂; Ni(NO₃)₂; Mn(NO₃)₂; Fe(NO₃)₃; Co(NO₃)₂; Cr(NO₃)₂; Mg(NO₃)₂. Compounds involving Cu and Pt, having potentials higher than hydrogen, give metal deposition (Cu and Pt) but the others, except for Ni, do not.

The overall galvanic exchange etching mechanism can be illustrated using FIGS. 3 and 4. In FIG. 3 the anodic process,

Si+6F⁻═SiF₆ ²⁻+4e ⁻(−1.24 Volts)

is the local etching of silicon. While the removal of the electrons accompanied by the discharge of silver ions is the cathodic process

Ag⁺ +e ⁻=Ag(+0.8 Volts)

For standard conditions the overall cell voltage is 2.04 volts. The other cathodic couples of interest are Cu/Cu²⁺ (+0.35V); PtCl₆ ²⁻/PtCl₄ ²⁻ (+0.74V); Fe³⁺/Fe²⁺ (+0.77V), since they are all positive with respect to hydrogen. Couples that are more negative than H⁺/H₂ will be in competition with hydrogen and will be largely ineffective. FIG. 4 shows a schematic version of the partial electrode reactions.

Silver Removal

The final stage of the process involved removing the silver which was left on the etched silicon particles from the third and fourth stages. The silver was removed (and saved) using a solution of 15% HNO₃ for 5˜10 min.

It will be appreciated, of course, that any appropriate approach can be adopted in order to arrive at the approaches and apparatus described above. For example the pillar detaching operation can comprise any of a shaking, scraping, chemical or other operation as long as pillars are removed from the particles. The particles can have any appropriate dimension and can for example be pure silicon or doped silicon other silicon-comprising material such as a silicon-germanium mixture or any other appropriate mixture. The particles from which pillars are created may be n- or p-type, ranging from 100 to 0.001 Ohm cm, or it may be a suitable alloy of silicon, for example Si_(x)Ge_(1-x). The particles may be metallurgical grade silicon.

The particles and/or the detached pillars can be used for any appropriate purpose such as fabrication of electrodes generally including cathodes. The cathode material can be of any appropriate material, typically a lithium-based metal oxide or phosphate material such as LiCoO₂, LiMn_(x)Ni_(x)Co_(1-2x)O₂ or LiFePO₄. The features of different embodiments can be interchanged or juxtaposed as appropriate and the method steps performed in any appropriate order.

Although relatively high purity single crystal wafers of silicon can be etched to produce pillars of the desired parameters, the wafers themselves are very expensive owing to their high purity. Furthermore, it is difficult to arrange a pillared-wafer into an electrode-geometry. Embodiments of the present invention are advantageous because metallurgical grade silicon is relatively cheap and pillared particles may themselves be incorporated into a composite electrode without further processing. Also, pillared particles are a good source of silicon fibres and can be used themselves as the “active” ingredient in a battery electrode.

The particles used for etching may be crystalline for example mono- or poly-crystalline with a crystallite size equal to or greater than the required pillar height. The polycrystalline particle may comprise any number of crystals from example two or more.

Advantageously, metallurgical grade silicon is particularly suitable as a battery electrode because of the relatively high density of defects (compared to silicon wafers used in the semiconductor industry). This leads to a low resistance and hence high conductivity.

As the skilled person will understand, both n-type and p-type silicon can be etched and any density of charge carriers is appropriate provided the material does not become significantly degenerate. 

1-36. (canceled)
 37. A plurality of discrete particles, wherein each particle comprises silicon and includes a particle core and a plurality of silicon-comprising elongate structures, each extending outwardly from the particle core from a first end to a second end, wherein each of the plurality of elongate structures is attached to the core at the first end of the elongate structure and the second end of the elongate structure is an unattached free end, and wherein the elongate structures are capable of being lithiated and delithiated.
 38. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 wherein the plurality of discrete particles is in the form of a powder.
 39. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 wherein each particle consists essentially of the particle core and the plurality of silicon-comprising elongate structures.
 40. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 wherein the elongate structures consist essentially of silicon.
 41. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 wherein the particles have a first dimension of at least 0.5 μm.
 42. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 wherein the particles have a first dimension in the range of 10 μm to 1 mm.
 43. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37, wherein the elongate structures have a diameter in the range of 0.08 to 0.70 microns.
 44. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 in which the elongate structures have a length from the first end to the second end in the range of 4 to 100 microns.
 45. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 in which the elongate structures have an aspect ratio of greater than 20:1.
 46. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 in wherein the particles comprise n-type silicon, p-type silicon, an alloy of silicon or a silicon-germanium mixture.
 47. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 wherein the silicon-comprising elongate structures have a silicon purity of 90.00 to 99.95% by mass.
 48. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 in which the plurality of elongate structures coat one or more surfaces of each particle.
 49. A plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37 in which the plurality of silicon-comprising elongate structures have sides terminated on {110} planes.
 50. A composite structure for an electrode comprising a plurality of discrete particles as claimed in claim 37; and at least one of a conductive additive and a binder.
 51. A composite structure for an electrode as claimed in claim 50, in which the plurality of discrete particles comprise 70 to 95% by mass of the composite structure.
 52. A plurality of discrete particles, wherein each particle comprises silicon and includes a particle core and a plurality of silicon-comprising elongate structures extending outwardly therefrom from a first end to a second end, wherein the plurality of elongate structures are attached to the core at the first end of the elongate structure and unattached to the core at the second end, and wherein the silicon-comprising elongate structures are capable of being lithiated and delithiated and are capable of withstanding the volumetric expansion and contraction associated with lithium insertion and extraction without breaking. 